In your browser, enter the URL chrome://settings/search#proxy and click on the
“Change proxy settings…” button. This should open your system network
settings, where you should change the Socks Host (under Network proxy) as
indicated below:

In a terminal, connect to your instance using SSH with dynamic port forwarding
enabled:

ssh-D6676tunnel@[ip]

You should leave this SSH session established while using the proxy. Now,
your browser needs to be configured to use this tunnel as a proxy. The
procedure varies per browser and is described below for Safari, Chrome and
Firefox.

In your browser, enter the URL chrome://settings/search#proxy and click on the
“Change proxy settings…” button. This should open your system network
settings, where you should change the Socks Proxy (under Proxies) as indicated
on the previous Safari example.

After installing PuTTY, open it and connect to your cloud tunnel instance. On
the Category list, go to Connection, SSH and Tunnels. For the destination
source port, enter 6676 and select Dynamic and then click on “Add”, as
indicated on the image below.

On the Category list, go back to session and enter the IP address of your cloud
tunnel instance.

You should leave this SSH session established while using the proxy.

Now, your browser needs to be configured to use this tunnel as a proxy. The
procedure varies per browser and is described below for Internet Explorer,
Chrome and Firefox.

In your browser, enter the URL chrome://settings/search#proxy and click on the
“Change proxy settings…” button. This should open your system internet
options, where you can configure a SOCKS proxy as explained previously
in the Internet Explorer example.